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Now, protesters target NATO meet in Naples
By Hasan Suroor
LONDON, AUG.8. Bruised and battered, yes. But giving up? No, not
just yet.
After Genoa, the next battleground chosen by anti- globalisation
protesters is Naples where NATO Defence Ministers are to meet
next month to discuss among other things the controversial U.S.
plan for a nuclear missile defence shield. The protesters, who
say they would be armed, have threatened to lay siege to the
summit and warned that police ``will have to shoot us to stop
us''. The threat to disrupt the meet has come from the Naples-
based NO-global Network whose activists were in the thick of
action in Genoa.
The NATO Secretary-General, Lord Robertson, and the U.S. Defence
Secretary, Mr. Donald Rumsfeld, are expected to attend the
summit, scheduled for September 26 and 27.
With echoes of last month's mayhem at Genoa still ringing in
their ears, Italian authorities have reacted with nervousness and
the Mayor of Naples, Ms. Rosa Jervolino, has asked the Government
to cancel the summit saying she does not want to see Naples turn
into another Genoa. ``It is too risky. The climate in the country
is too tense and I don't want to militarise the city. Putting the
summit off would be opportune as we are running the risk of a
massive protest,'' she has said claiming that she has the support
of local residents and businesses.
The move comes days after the Italian Government surprised the
Food and Agricultural Organisation expressing its reluctance to
host the United Nations World Food Summit at Rome in November
citing fears of Genoa-type protests. Critics of the right-wing
Berlusconi government have accused it of losing its nerve and
abandoning its international obligations. Its own coalition
partners have opposed any action that might suggest that Italy is
running scared of protesters, while the Left-wing mayor of Rome,
Mr. Walter Veltroni, has said that at a time when ``Italy isn't
looking very good to the outside world'' cancelling an
international summit would send out a wrong signal. ``It's the
duty of the Italian Government to guarantee the security of its
people,'' he said insisting that the Food Summit must go on.
However, the Mayor of Naples is going ahead with her campaign to
get the NATO summit out of her hair. She said ``things have
changed a great deal'' since the city hosted the G-7 summit in
1994 and she did not wish to see Naples turn into ``military
fortress like Genoa and then destroyed by anarchists''. More
recently, Naples witnessed chaotic scenes when anti-globalisation
activists clashed with police during an internet summit, Global
Forum.
But media reports suggest it is unlikely that the Italian
government would agree in view of the damage that this might do
to its international image, particularly after the widespread
outrage over its handling of the Genoa protests. Allegations of
police `brutality' following the murder of a young protester by a
policeman have become a political issue in Italy exposing chinks
within the coalition led by the media magnate, Mr. Silvio
Berlusconi. Several European countries and Britain have condemned
the way the police dealt with the demonstrators.
Meanwhile, Mr. Franceso Caruso, leader of No-global Network, has
warned of ``direct and radical'' action at Naples saying:
``Against NATO we will not be unarmed. We will not take to the
streets unprepared for clashes. They will have to shoot us to
stop us.''
Observers said this was the first time that anti- globalisation
protesters, normally concerned about economic issues, would be
picketing a NATO meeting. According to Mr. Caruso, the
provocation was the proposed discussion on the U.S. ``Son of Star
Wars'' project which he denounced as ``another example of the
military arrogance of the big powers''.
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